EISENBERG: And let's welcome our contestants. We have Marty Ambos and James Bronzan.

(APPLAUSE)

EISENBERG: Hi guys, welcome to ASK ME ANOTHER.

MARTY AMBOS: Hi.

EISENBERG: Hi.

JAMES BRONZAN: Thank you.

EISENBERG: So James, you work making, or you used to work making data visualizations, is that right?

BRONZAN: I still do, for some consulting clients.

EISENBERG: OK. What are data visualizations exactly?

BRONZAN: So I take big piles of numbers and make pictures out of them that you can use to make judgments about the data you've got.

EISENBERG: Like Picassos?

BRONZAN: There's the artistic side and there's the nerdy side. I'm on the nerdy side.

EISENBERG: Ok. So... oh, like...

BRONZAN: So...

EISENBERG: ...so more like superheroes?

BRONZAN: Well, no. More like, you know, how your third graders did on math last year. That kind of thing.

EISENBERG: OK. Still totally confused. Very good.

(LAUGHTER)

EISENBERG: Marty, you're a cyclist extraordinaire?

AMBOS: Extraordinaire, sure yeah.

EISENBERG: Do you have a bike problem?

AMBOS: I do. I actually saw this bike, which I shall affectionately call Cowbike. So Cowbike has - it weighs about 125 pounds. It has real bull horns as handlebars. It has - it actually has a nose ring, like a steer, but I chased it for three years and what do I do first as I get it?

EISENBERG: Yeah?

AMBOS: I take a video of me on my iPhone riding away, which I realized was not very safe. And I have had to replace car bumpers.

EISENBERG: From your bike?

AMBOS: It's 125 pounds and I'm not a small guy.

(LAUGHTER)

AMBOS: That's a lot of weight coming down the road.

EISENBERG: It's called a Cowbike officially?

AMBOS: Yeah.

EISENBERG: OK.

(LAUGHTER)

EISENBERG: I'm excited to have you guys as contestants because, between the data visualization has two things in his head and the guy with the Cowbike problem... what I'm saying is that we finally managed to get my people up onstage, so thank you.

(LAUGHTER)

EISENBERG: All right, Greg, what is this game we're subjecting them to? Something called Sublime Rhymes?

GREG PLISKA: Exactly. Sublime and rhyme, because they rhyme.

EISENBERG: Sublime and rhyme. Whoa.

PLISKA: Mm-hmm.

EISENBERG: Excellent.

PLISKA: Now, we've put together some fun rhyming phrases and our contestants, Dan and Mike and Cowbike... no. James, sorry, James and Marty will have to guess what they are from the clues. For example, if I said name a classic cartoon penguin dressed up as the disgraced lip synchers (ph) of "Girl You Know It's True," you would say...

EISENBERG: Milli Vanilli Chilly Willy.

PLISKA: Exactly right.

EISENBERG: That's right.

PLISKA: Milli Vanilli Chilly Willy.

(APPLAUSE)

EISENBERG: Oh, thanks.

PLISKA: So James and Marty, if you know the sublime rhyme in time, ring your chime.

(LAUGHTER)

AMBOS: We're in trouble.

PLISKA: We'll see the winner of this game in our Ask Me One More final round at the end of the show. If everyone's ready, here we go. It's a Hostess chocolate cake shaped like a giant ape from Skull Island.